Christopher Hitchens Undergoes Waterboarding….. for Research
By Michael Lang on Jul 6, 2008 in Featured
Chistopher Hitchens experiences “” for his column in ……say what?
Sixty year ago, the United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and they have been documenting and condemning the abuse of humans and their rights all over the world ever since.
The United States, for the most part, has always avoided being on “their List”….. until now!
Amnesty International said Wednesday in a report that again urged the United States to close down the Guantánamo Bay detention camp in Cuba
The report singled out for criticism China, the United States, and Russia and accused the European Union of complicity in the rendition of terrorism suspects. The European Union, it said, must "set the same bar on human rights for its own members as it does for other countries."
It urged Washington to close down the Guantánamo facility and other "secret detention centers," and to "prosecute the detainees under fair trial standards or release them and unequivocally reject the use of torture and ill-treatment."
It appears that the United States can no longer maintain its innocence and high morals in matters of mistreatment and torture now that we’ve been found out. This would include the now popular use of “water-boarding,” which is a form of drowning..
Just in case the revelation that American torturers took their cues from that model of moral clarity that was the Chinese Communist regime hasn’t fully convinced you that the practice is unquestionably, incontrovertibly evil, Christopher Hitchens’ column in the August 2008 Vanity Fair, "Believe
Me, It’s Torture," ought to drive the point home. That is, if the accompanying video, available online at Vanity Fair’s website, doesn’t do it first.
In the video (BELOW), Christopher Hitchens is brought, hooded and bound, into an austere looking storage room, and placed on a board, slightly elevated at its foot. He is instructed by the similarly masked interrogators on how to call a halt to the procedure, either through a safe word - "red" - or by releasing the "dead man’s handle" - a metal object placed in each hand. A towel is placed over his face and one of the interrogators begins pouring water on Hitchens’ face from an ordinary-looking milk carton. The interrogators demonstrate no more aggression that one might when watering a houseplant. In fact, the process looks so unremarkable that you begin to wonder if they aren’t simply "warming Hitchens up" for something worse.
Seventeen seconds pass, and then Hitchens drops the dead man’s handle. When the hood is removed, it is jarring to see how panic-stricken Hitchens looks.
A VIDEO IS WORTH A MILLION WORDS
In the video, Hitchens describes the experience:
They told me that when I activated the ‘dead man’s handle’ - which is a simple process, you simply release something, let it go - I didn’t do that. I practically, even though my hands were bound, I…as near as I could…I threw the thing out of my hand. I mean, I really wanted it to stop.
I could swear I shouted the code word, but I hadn’t.
Everything completely goes on you when you’re breathing water. You can’t think about anything else.
It would be bad enough if you did have something. Suppose if they wanted to know where a relative of yours was…or a lover. You feel, "Well, I’m going to betray them now. Because this has to come to an end. I can’t take this anymore." But what if you didn’t have anything? What if you’d got the wrong guy? Then you would be in danger of losing your mind very quickly.
That last paragraph, I believe, is critical, especially considering the torture practices of the Chinese Communists - who we are now emulating - were designed to elicit false confessions from those who were tortured.
Attention should be paid to the aftermath of the experience as well, which Hitchens relates thusly:
As a result of this very brief experience, if I do anything that gets my heart rate up, and I’m breathing hard, panting, I have a slight panic sensation that I’m not going to be able to catch my breath again…lately I’ve been having this feeling of waking up feeling smothered, trying to push everything off my face.
It takes only seventeen seconds to impact the life of an innocent man.
Waterboarding Christopher Hitchens - When Christopher Hitchens agreed to be waterboarded, he might have thought he’d last longer than 17 seconds, but, as the columnist put it, “everything completely goes on you when you’re breathing water.” READ THE WHOLE ITEM …
The effectiveness of waterboarding (form of torture) - Well known author Christopher Hitchens agreed to be waterboarded by the US Military in an effort to see if it constituted as torture or not. Waterboarding is used in interrogation and is effective because it simulates drowning and …
Code Word Red: Waterboarding IS Torture - Among the techniques described, said two officials present, was waterboarding, a practice that years later would be condemned as torture by Democrats and some Republicans on Capitol Hill. But on that day, no objections were raised. …
“If waterboarding does not constitute torture, then there is no … - So it was only fitting that having said that waterboarding was not torture as many claim, he put he put his money where is mouth is and fronted up. In the August 2008 issue of Vanity Fair, Hitchens writes of his experience of being …

Tags: Amnesty International,christopher hitchens,Featured,guantanamo bay,universal declaration human rights,Vanity Fair,waterboardingTags:




